When will Beijing’s patience with Taiwan run out? Most likely by 2033

Yiu Chung Wong says a clue to when Beijing will push for unification with Taiwan – by force if necessary – may lie in the important dates Xi Jinping mentioned in his 19th party congress speech. Meanwhile, China is laying the groundwork with carrot and stick measures

Despite the urgency of the Taiwan unification issue for the leadership of the Communist Party over the years, President Xi Jinping seems willing to bide his time. However, there are ominous signs that the mutual relationship across the Taiwan Strait is deteriorating after Tsai Ing-wen was elected Taiwan’s president in 2016 and after Donald Trump became US president in early 2017.

In 2017, the National Defence Authorisation Act was passed by the US Congress to allow American warships to conduct port calls in Taiwan. Moreover, on March 5 this year, the Taiwan Travel Act was enacted to encourage visits between officials at all levels. These landmark developments are tantamount to giving Taiwan “semi-official” status and could gradually constitute a paradigmatic shift in the US “one China” policy. A People’s Liberation Army general was quoted in a Chinese newspaper in Hong Kong as saying that “the date that US warships make a call on a Taiwanese port would be the date for unification”. Is this a warning to the US or a threat to Taiwanese authorities?

The revision of the constitution to remove term limits on the offices of the president and vice-president may be related to the issue of unification

Beijing’s official position is still “peaceful unification” and “one country, two systems”. However, in the official documents and speeches by leaders from Deng Xiaoping to Xi Jinping, China has never renounced the use of military force in achieving unification. Undoubtedly, this would be reserved as the last option.

Is Beijing ready to use force in the near future? Perhaps not. When the subject of unification came up during a discussion in the early 1970s between Mao Zedong and Henry Kissinger, secret envoy for then US president Nixon, Mao smiled and said, “We can wait for 100 years.” This means China might not be unified until 2049. Does China have so much strategic patience? It seems unlikely. Or was Mao simply kidding?

In his political report to the 19th party congress in 2017, Xi Jinping reiterated a number of important dates: the centennial anniversary of the establishment of the Communist Party in 2021; the centenary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 2049; the establishment of a relatively prosperous society by 2035; and, becoming a modern and civilised nation-state by the mid-21st century.

My hunch is that 2021 is too close – gearing up militarily is a huge task that requires years of preparation. Besides, China’s “Belt and Road Initiative” was launched just a few years ago and its success remains to be proven. The issue of North Korean denuclearisation is tricky despite the recent rapprochement between the US and Kim Jong-un. Relations with Japan remain cool and the South China Sea is still a hotly contested spot. In sum, 2021 will not be the year for unification by force. On the other hand, 2049 is too far away.

However, the revision of the constitution to remove term limits on the offices of the president and vice-president may be related to the issue of unification. The change certainly centralises power in one person. What purpose does that serve? Xi has served one term already and two more terms in office would extend his power to 2028 when he would be 75. A fourth term would allow him to stay until 2033 which falls in the middle of two centennials – 2021 and 2049. It is by then that Beijing will set its deadline for unification.

Meanwhile, what will Beijing do? First, isolate Taiwan diplomatically and reduce its international space as much as possible. Second, maintain cordial relationships with the Kuomintang and possibly assist the party in winning back the presidency in the next elections. Third, isolate the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) and enhance direct communication and trade with Taiwan’s people. Fourth, achieve greater social and economic integration by offering businesspeople more benefits. For example, on February 28, Beijing’s Taiwan Affairs Office announced a package of 31 measures for “benefiting Taiwan”, which open up mainland markets for Taiwanese investors in various sectors such as finance, real estate, cultural products, education, medicine, film and television. Beijing’s current strategy is: “Be patient, economics and trade first, politics second; society first, containment of the DPP administration second.”

Yiu Chung Wong is adjunct professor in the Department of Political Science at Lingnan University, Hong Kong